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HISTORY, POLITICS, AND CLAIMS OF MAN-MADE GLOBAL WARMING

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 June 2009

John David Lewis
Affiliation:
Political Science, Duke University

Abstract

Claims that a man-made global warming catastrophe is imminent have two major aspects: the scientific support offered for the claims, and the political proposals brought forth in response to the claims. The central questions are whether non-scientists should accept the claims themselves as true, and whether they should support the political proposals attached to them. Predictions of a coming disaster are shown to be a-historical in both the long term and the short term, to involve shifting predictions that are contrary to evidence, and to be opposed by many scientists. The political proposals to alleviate this alleged problem—especially plans by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency—are shown to offer no alternative to fossil fuels, and to portend a major economic decline and permanent losses of liberty. The anthropogenic global warming claims are largely motivated not by science, but by a desire for socialist intervention on a national and a global scale. Neither the claims to an impending climate catastrophe nor the political proposals attached to those claims should be accepted.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Social Philosophy and Policy Foundation 2009

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108 ANPR, 66–67; emphasis added.

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